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Equinox I (04).pdf

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344<br />

THE EQUINOX<br />

and embroidering it with gold thread drawn from the observation of things<br />

around him, the slave of popularity wears it threadbare. Morphia won't<br />

replace bread after the first month or so!<br />

Now we see Mr. Blackwood and Nemesis. He gets a reputation by marketing<br />

his tiny scrap of knowledge of the inner World; the public cries out for<br />

more, and the poor wage-slave, bankrupt in invention, does his best to<br />

fake—and fails.<br />

It is the male equivalent of the harlot who has drifted from Piccadilly to<br />

Waterloo Bridge Road.<br />

So here we see him, the shy smile changed to the open coarse appeal, the<br />

tawdry apparatus of his craft seen for what it is—rabbit-skin ermine!— and<br />

himself unmistakably the fifth-rate writer, like Baudelaire's “Old<br />

Mountebank”—surely no more pitiful—tumbling for no kindlier laugh than<br />

that of contempt. (And he might have been so fine!)<br />

This is why success must in the nature of things spoil everybody. Make a<br />

hit with one arrow; you must never dare to do more than change the colour of<br />

the feathers—till your quiver is empty.<br />

And how empty is Mr. Blackwood's! When it comes to a father hating his<br />

twin sons because (why?) he wanted one son very badly, going mad, and after<br />

his death turning the two into one in spite of a clergyman's reading aloud of<br />

Job—<br />

Well, hang it, Mr. Blackwood, the woman has the best of it yet. It is a very<br />

foolish girl who cannot hold her own for ten years. But you who have been<br />

writing hardly half the time are only fit for the Literary Lock Hospital.<br />

JONATHAN HUTCHINSON, Natu Minimus.<br />

AMBERGRIS. A Selection of Poems by ALEISTER CROWLEY. Elkin Mathews.<br />

3s. 6d. Printed by Strangeways and sons, Great Tower Street, Cambridge<br />

Circus, W. C.<br />

We don't like books of selections, and you can't make a nightingale out of<br />

a crow by picking out the least jarring notes.<br />

The book is nicely bound and printed—as if that were any excuse! Mr.<br />

Crowley, however, must have been surprised to receive a bill of over Six<br />

Pounds for “author’s corrections,” as the book was printed from his volume<br />

of Collected Works, and the alterations made by his were well within the<br />

dozen!<br />

[Yes; he was surprised; it was his first—and last—experience of these<br />

strange ways.—ED.]<br />

If poets are ever going to make themselves heard, they must find some<br />

means of breaking down the tradition that they are the easy dupes of every—<br />

[Satis.—ED.]

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